Well, I just spent the last two hours trying to figure out why my changes to a source file weren't having any effect, only to discover that there are two files in different directories with the same name and I was editing the wrong one. If that's not a good sign that it's beer-o-clock, I don't know what is.
@JamesMcNellis Happened to me a couple times before, it's not fun. I once got so frustrated I deleted the file I was editing and it still compiled and ran! :)
Does someone know a link for the VC++ 6 compiler , I just want to begin php extensions , I've already VC9 installed, but I need VC6 to compile for php 5
@SimoTAQI If you have an MSDN subscription, you can download it from msdn.microsoft.com. To the best of my knowledge, there's no other direct way to get it since it's no longer supported by Microsoft (it's over 13 years old now, you know).
I propose the questioner of it to select the other one -.-
most ppl will read the FAQ question then only read the accepted answer. But it's wrong because it says only classes can be POD, and not int/char etc :(
it also says the POD class cannot have member functions or typedefs, which is also wrong.
@Tony Set up a test project with two cpp files and one header. Put that function into the header and have both cpp files include it. put a function into each cpp file calling this function. put a main into one of the cpp files calling both functions. Compile and link. If this fails, there's something fishy with your compiler. If it works, there's a difference between this test project and your real code. Find that difference.
@Tony The standard isn't very definitive on this. Basically, <header> is supposed to be stuff that's installed on your machine, while "header" is supposed to be stuff that comes with whatever project you're compiling. In praxis, this determines where the compiler looks for a header.
@sbi I guess it could. I can't imagine why an implementor would throw anything from std::string::swap, given that it is easy to implement without throwing anything.
I'm surprised that in the C++0x Swappable concept there is no mention of exception safety or nothrow guarantees.
@Tony It's not even swapping strings of characters. It's swapping pointers to strings of characters (well, a good implementation wouldn't swap the contents of the strings).
@sbi I don't see anything that would prevent it.
I'm more surprised about the Swappable concept not requiring that all swap functions be noexcept... I'm not familiar enough with the changes made to the standard library for C++0x to know why, though.
what do you put in a catch (...) {} that is supposed to catch exceptions that aren't caught by the libraries exception objects? Is a catch all really that good an idea?
Handle known/expected exceptions, and let the others propogate. If an unexpected exception is generated, the program should die. SThis gives you an opportunity to generate a dump file close to the point of the defect, and you can use this to find & fix your problem
If you try to catch everything, even exceptions you dont expect, you will make it impossible to find & fix the problems that are causing the unexpected exceptions
The question is short and simple. Why can't Community Wiki posts(specially questions) be rolled back to non-Wiki state?
P.S : Recently my post here was made CW (by mistake I guess) so I was wondering if something like that(conversion from wiki to non-wiki state) could be implemented. Its merely ...
@JohnDibling There's currently nine questions labeled as most-vexing-parse. Actually, they all ought to be closed as dupes. I'm sure there's dozens more of these out there.
If we found a good answer that got accepted, we could tag that as an FAQ entry.
@Tony No. An rvalue reference is a reference that can bind to an rvalue. Sadly, most explanations of what an rvalue actually is (for example "right side of an assignment", "values" etc.) are completely wrong. Watch this video to learn more.
> As I explained in the video, lvalueness/rvalueness is a property of expressions, not objects.
when i did a defect report over usenet about this: template<int const A> struct B { decltype(A) a; }; and that it's unclear what a's type is, they said the standard requires it to have type "int", because A is said to be a prvalue and so it's unqualified
so they attributed the rvalue property not to an expression, but to the template parameter itself
@icecrime The sentences starting with "An lvalue is an expression e with the property that..." and "An rvalue is an expression that refers to a memory location..." are wrong.
@JohannesSchaublitb Sadly, many people don't understand the difference between the expression itself, the process of evaluating the expression, the result of that evaluation, the object it designates (if any), the expression's "value category" etc.
Many people also don't understand the difference between operator precedence and order of evaluation.
Here is another error: "The result of calling a function whose return type is not a reference is a prvalue". It's not the result of calling the function, but the expression name of the function, open paren, close paren.
3.10/1 starts so nicely with "expressions are categorized...", and then all those mistakes... I really don't get it :(
@JohannesSchaublitb What is ->* anyway, pointer to member dereference or something? I have never explicitly used it, so far.
@JohannesSchaublitb How often do you do a cons? Not very often, I would say. And types are everywhere, although most of the time, you don't write them down explicitly...
@JohannesSchaublitb Type inference is kinda scary the first time you see it if you are used to C++'s explicit typename iterator_traits<T>::value_type tediousness :)
I especially love it when the types get so complicated they span an entire line. "WTF, what does this weird line do?" - "Oh, that's just the return type of the function!" :-)